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Conscious Eating

Journal Abstracts
Oct 30, 2025

Conscious Eating

Electrical Conversations Between Gut Bacteria and the Brain

Journal Abstracts
Nov 05, 2025

A 2025 study published in Current Opinion in Food Science, a collaboration between scientists in Spain, Italy, and the United States, explored how bacterial bioelectric signaling may directly influence brain function.

For nearly two decades, the gut-brain axis has been a focus of scientific research. The gut microbiome, the diverse community of living microorganisms residing in the digestive tract, shares a dynamic, two-way relationship with its host. These bacterial populations both shape and are shaped by their environment, influencing mood and cognition to digestion and immune function.

Communication along the gut-brain axis occurs through a complex network linking the central nervous system, the enteric nervous system (embedded in the walls of the gut), and the microbial community itself. These interactions are mediated by biological pathways and influenced by external factors such as diet, sleep, exercise, and social connection.

The study highlighted a novel dimension of that dialogue: electrical communication. Researchers describe how bacteria generate bioelectric signals that can talk to the host nervous system—forming a kind of microbial electrical language. Nutrition and dietary patterns appear to shape this signaling activity, influencing how bacterial communities communicate with the host brain.

The authors propose that amid the growing enthusiasm for microbiome research, science still lacks a clear understanding of the underlying mechanisms that connect bacterial and neuronal activity. They argue that uncovering this relationship will require new methodologies. Perhaps, methodologies that simultaneously recognize both the human host perspective and the agency of microorganisms themselves. Bioelectrical signaling, they suggest, could play a key role in this connection. The authors' perspective offers a more holistic framework for understanding gut–brain interactions and suggests that bioelectricity may act as a unifying mechanism that coordinates the body’s diverse physiological signals.

REFERENCES

Lombardo-Hernandez, J., Mansilla-Guardiola, J., Geuna, S., Levin, M., Herrera-Rincon, C. (2025) New insights in the gut–brain axis: the role of bioelectrical microbiome. Current Opinion in Food Science, 66, doi: 10.1016/j.cofs.2025.10135

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